"Bizarre and objectively hypocritical."

On Sunday, The New York Times published a report describing President Donald Trump's administration's ongoing efforts to delegitimize the transgender community. Not long after the reports surfaced, however, reporter Dave Levinthal discovered that, in a bizarre and objectively hypocritical turn of events, Trump's official website is still selling a pro-LGBTQ T-shirt in its online store.

The "Trump Pride Tee" is a basic white crewneck shirt emblazoned with watercolor stripes of the colors of the rainbow, over which the words "LGBTQ for TRUMP" are printed. "Show your pride and your support for Trump with this exclusive equality tee," reads the garment's description on the site. The shirt is currently marked down from its usual price of $30 to $24 — all of which, as Levinthal pointed out, would go straight to Donald Trump's 2020 re-election campaign. Basically, purchasing this pro-LGBTQ shirt would provide funds to a deeply anti-LGBTQ administration.

Per the Times, the Department of Health and Human Services is currently working on developing a federal policy that would define gender as something determined by one's genitalia at birth. This new, incredibly archaic definition would reportedly limit gender to "either male or female" and deem it "unchangeable," according to a memo about the proposed policy obtained by the Times. The only way to change a person's sex as listed on their birth certificate would be through genetic testing.

In the hours after the Times report was published, countless transgender people and allies took to social media to react to the proposal, which would deny and delegitimize the core identities of 1.4 million of Trump's own constituents. They shared powerful information about the transgender experience, and predicted how such a rollback of rights would affect the LGBTQ community. Many offered up tangible actions that you can take if you don't agree with the Trump administration's proposal, while even more simply celebrated their transgender friends as heroes, often using the hashtag #WontBeErased."

Additionally, many people organized impromptu protests on Sunday and Monday, including a particularly large gathering at New York City's Washington Square Park on Sunday evening, as seen in the photos below.